Graduate certificate Media and Modernity

Bachelor's degree

In Princeton (USA)

Price on request

Description

  • Type

    Bachelor's degree

  • Location

    Princeton (USA)

The Program in Media and Modernity promotes the interdisciplinary study of the unique cultural formations that came to prominence during the last two centuries, with special attention paid to the interplay between culture and technology. The program centers on architecture, art, film, photography, literature, philosophy, music, history, and all forms of electronic media from radio to video and information technologies. The program draws on the rich hu­man and material resources that exist at Princeton and provides a focus and forum for research and teaching in the spaces, texts, and media of modernity. The program offers a graduate certificate and collabora­tive teaching, learning, and research opportunities centered on team-taught seminars and cross-disciplinary colloquia.

Students may not gain admission to the University through the Program in Media and Modernity.  They may affiliate with the program and earn a certificate from it after having been admitted through a degree-granting department.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Princeton (USA)
See map
08544

Start date

On request

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Subjects

  • Architectural
  • Media
  • Technology
  • Cinema
  • Art
  • Radio
  • Philosophy
  • Teaching
  • Works

Course programme

ARC 571 Research in Architecture (also

ART 581

/

MOD 573

)
A research seminar in selected areas of aesthetics, art criticism, and architectural theory from the 18th to the 20th centuries on the notion of representation in art and architecture. This seminar is given to students in the doctoral program at the School of Architecture and to doctoral candidates in other departments.

ARC 576 Advanced Topics in Modern Architecture (also

MOD 502

/

ART 598

)
Explores the critical transformation in the relationship between interior and exterior space in modern architecture, which is most evident in domestic space. Domestic space ceases to be simply bounded space in opposition to the outside, whether physical or social. An analysis of modern houses is used as a frame to register contemporary displacements of the relationship between public and private space, instigated by the emerging reality of the technologies of communicaton, including newspaper, telephone, radio, film, and television.

ARC 577 Topics in Contemporary Architectural Theory (also

MOD 577

) Explores recent changes in architectural history, theory, criticism, and practice by examining the effects of contemporary critical theory on architectural discourse. Particular attention is given to the ways in which architectural theory has influenced the critical theory of other disciplines and vice versa.

ARC 594 Topics in Architecture (also

MOD 504

/

HUM 593

/

ART 584

)
This course covers various topics related to the history and theory of architecture.

ART 565 Seminar in Modernist Art and Theory (also

MOD 565

) The seminar focuses on the study of a particular problem in modernism. Possible topics include the advent of modernist abstraction, the different uses of advant-garde devices of collage and photomontage, the readymade and the construction, art and technology, art and the unconscious, art and political revolution, and antimodernism.

ART 567 Seminar in History of Photography (also

MOD 567

) The seminar is concerned with the work of a single European or American photographer or with a significant movement in the 20th century.

COM 513 Topics in Literature and Philosophy (also

MOD 580

) Chance and contingency were long thought to lie outside the realm of knowledge. Then there arose new means for measuring probabilities of the most varied kinds. This seminar will explore the conditions and occurrence of that shift, as well as its consequences, as they are reflected in a few literary and philosophical works.

GER 517 Modernism and Modernity (also

MOD 535

/

FRE 554

)
Explores the rise of modernism in the arts in the German-language world. Emphasis on the intellectual sources of the modernist movement in such thinkers as Nietzsche and Freud and such theorists of modernity as Weber, Simmel, Andreas-Salomé, and Benjamin.

GER 525 Studies in German Film (also

MOD 510

/

COM 524

)
Course explores movements in German cinema, with attention given to the cultural and ideological contexts as well as recent debates in contemporary film theory. Attention may focus on such pivotal topics as Weimar or the New German cinema, issues in German film theory, questions of film and Nazi culture, or avant-garde cinema, and on genres such as the "Heimatfilm," the "Street Film," and works by women and minority filmmakers.

HOS 595 Introduction to Historiography of Science (also

MOD 564

/

HIS 595

)
Introduces beginning graduate students to the central problems and principal literature of the history of science from the Enlightenment to the 20th century. Course is organized around several different methodological approaches, and readings include important works by anthropologists, sociologists and philosophers, as well as by historians of science.

Graduate certificate Media and Modernity

Price on request